GHK-Cu (Copper-Binding Tripeptide | Skin & Tissue Remodeling Studies)

GHK-Cu (Copper-Binding Tripeptide | Skin & Tissue Remodeling Studies)

Vial / 50mg
₱1,300.00
Sale price  ₱1,300.00 Regular price 
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GHK-Cu (Copper-Binding Tripeptide | Skin & Tissue Remodeling Studies)

GHK-Cu (Copper-Binding Tripeptide | Skin & Tissue Remodeling Studies)

₱1,300.00
Sale price  ₱1,300.00 Regular price 
Taxes included.
Peptide Amount

Product Info

GHK-Cu, also known as copper tripeptide-1 or glycyl-L-histidyl-L-lysine copper complex, is an investigational copper-binding peptide commonly discussed in skin, hair, wound-healing, tissue-repair, and regenerative research. It is a naturally occurring tripeptide complex associated with copper signaling and is often studied for its possible relationship to extracellular matrix remodeling, collagen-related pathways, antioxidant response, and tissue-repair mechanisms. PubChem lists GHK-Cu as a copper peptide complex with the formula C₂₈H₄₈CuN₁₂O₈.

Unlike metabolic peptides such as tirzepatide, GHK-Cu is not designed around GLP-1, GIP, glucagon, appetite, or glucose-control receptor activity. Instead, scientific interest centers on copper-peptide signaling, skin-quality research, hair and follicle models, wound-healing investigation, connective-tissue support, inflammation-response pathways, and broader regenerative study. Reviews describe GHK-Cu as a peptide of interest in human skin research and tissue-regenerative mechanisms, while still emphasizing the need to avoid overextending claims beyond the available evidence.

Potential research interests observed in studies

  • Skin and collagen research
    GHK-Cu is widely discussed in skin-related research involving collagen support, dermal remodeling, skin appearance, elasticity, and extracellular matrix activity. This is one of the most common areas where copper peptides are studied.

  • Wound-healing and tissue-repair models
    Research interest often focuses on wound-healing pathways, tissue-repair signaling, and recovery-related mechanisms. Reviews describe GHK-Cu as a copper peptide associated with regenerative and protective actions in skin and tissue models.

  • Hair and follicle research
    GHK-Cu is frequently discussed in relation to scalp, follicle, and hair-support research. These discussions are mainly investigational and should not be presented as proven treatment outcomes.

  • Connective-tissue support research
    Because GHK-Cu is associated with matrix remodeling and collagen-related pathways, it is often studied in broader connective-tissue and tissue-quality research contexts.

  • Copper-peptide signaling
    GHK-Cu is studied as a copper-binding peptide complex, which makes it relevant to research involving copper transport, peptide-metal coordination, cellular signaling, and redox-related mechanisms.

  • Antioxidant and inflammation-response research
    Scientific discussion around GHK-Cu often includes antioxidant response, inflammatory signaling, and tissue-stress pathways. These findings should be understood as research interests, not confirmed clinical benefits.

  • Cosmetic and dermatology research interest
    GHK-Cu has a long history of discussion in cosmetic science, especially around skin-aging, texture, and appearance-related research. Public interest has grown, but many consumer-facing claims still exceed what controlled clinical evidence can firmly establish.

  • Stable topical-research interest
    GHK-Cu is commonly discussed in topical and cosmetic research contexts because of its copper-peptide identity and skin-focused study history. Injectable or unapproved human use should not be implied or promoted.

Limitations and risks observed or discussed

  • Human clinical evidence is still limited
    Although GHK-Cu has more cosmetic and skin-related research history than many newer peptides, broad human claims around skin regeneration, hair growth, anti-aging, wound healing, or systemic benefits still require stronger controlled clinical evidence.

  • Not an approved medication for disease treatment
    GHK-Cu should not be marketed as a treatment for wounds, hair loss, skin disease, scarring, inflammation, injury recovery, or any medical condition.

  • Route of use matters
    Topical cosmetic discussion is different from injection or systemic exposure. Research-grade or unapproved peptide products should not be used in humans, especially by injection.

  • Possible irritation or sensitivity
    Copper peptide products may cause irritation, sensitivity, redness, or other local reactions in some topical-use contexts. These risks may vary depending on concentration, formulation, and individual skin response.

  • Copper-related formulation concerns
    Because GHK-Cu involves copper complexation, improper formulation, instability, concentration errors, or contamination may affect product quality and safety.

  • Possible risks from unregulated products
    Products sold online as research chemicals may carry risks related to contamination, inaccurate concentration, mislabeling, sterility issues, or lack of regulated manufacturing oversight.

  • Claims may exceed the evidence
    Many online claims around "anti-aging," "hair growth," "scar repair," "skin regeneration," or "wound healing" go beyond what has been proven in controlled human trials.

 

Website-safe closing line

GHK-Cu is scientifically interesting for copper-peptide signaling, skin, hair, wound-healing, connective-tissue, and regenerative research, but broad human safety and effectiveness claims remain insufficiently established. GHK-Cu should not be marketed as a treatment for any medical condition, and unapproved human use should be avoided. Sterile Labs products are strictly for research use only.

 

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